AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the link between childhood trauma and depression, focusing on how anxiety sensitivity mediates this relationship.
  • It involved 110 participants diagnosed with depression, who completed several assessments to evaluate their experiences with childhood trauma and anxiety.
  • Findings revealed that emotional neglect and abuse during childhood are significant predictors of depressive symptoms, potentially due to how they influence cognitive perceptions of stress and self-worth.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Depression is one of the most common public health problems. Considering the frequency of childhood trauma in people with depressive symptoms, determining mediating factors is important in understanding the relationship between them. Our study aimed to evaluate the mediating effect of anxiety sensitivity, one of the cognitive structures that plays a role in the etiology and maintenance of psychopathologies, on depression symptoms of childhood traumas.

Patients And Methods: The study included 110 participants aged between 18 and 65, diagnosed with depression, and applied to the psychiatry outpatient clinic. Of the participants, 35 were male and 75 were female. The majority of participants were in the 18-25 age group (39.1%), followed by a smaller percentage in the 25-35 age group (32.7%). The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-I), Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ), and Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI-3) were administered to participants between 15 February and 15 April 2024.

Results: When the sample was examined according to the history of depressive symptoms, it was found that the score of the cognitive subscale of ASI-3 and the scores of the physical neglect, emotional neglect, and emotional abuse subscales of the CTQ were significantly higher in the group with depressive symptoms. When the mediating effect of the scores of "Emotional neglect", "Physical neglect", and "Emotional abuse" subscales of CTQ, and the score of "Cognitive" subscale of ASI-3 score was examined with regression models, it was found that the history of emotional neglect and abuse in childhood predicted depressive symptoms through the cognitive sub-group of AS.

Conclusion: In our study, it was shown that childhood trauma, which could cause a person to evaluate stressful life events as more depressogenic and the formation of negative cognitions about themselves and the world, predicted the severity and occurrence of depressive symptoms through fear of cognitive dysfunction.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11468288PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/NDT.S478681DOI Listing

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